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Doreen's avatar

Is it possible that parasites can also cause imbalance in the body to the point that the body cannot restore its original equilibrium? In that case, a restart might be required, whether it’s possible or not, but there is evidence that it is. In order to achieve that result, the dosage of IVM used must kill only creatures whose tolerance to the poison is lower than the threshold for human beings, so it can act as an anti-parasitic in humans. Where is that limit? I don’t think anyone knows. https://rayhorvaththesource.substack.com/p/ivermectin-as-a-bait-and-switch-operation

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Susan Gleeson's avatar

Tom Cowan talks a lot of sense but I think he's on the wrong track here. Ivermectin is so hard to get, both prescribed and filled by pharmacies. Major obstacle. Most people who needed it were past reproductive age or were old enough to already have had children, so even if it did reduce fertility, it's a null point. I bet countries where it's regularly taken don't have fertility problems and that's what needs to be studied to support or refute this theory. Taking it for rosacea, very effective. Not worried about side effects considering it has so many anti-inflammatory mechanisms but will look at fertility rates in some African countries to be sure.

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